Student Research Competition: Call for Participation
Quick Facts
- Submission deadline: 14 Jan 2011 PCS submission system
- see PCS Submission FAQ for new procedures.
- Notification: 11 Feb 2011
- Camera Ready: 18 Feb 2011
- Submission Format: Camera-ready non-anonymized 6 page extended abstract in Extended Abstracts format, plus proof of student status
- At the Conference: All students will give a poster presentation. Based on the judging at the poster session, a group of students will be invited to give a short talk. Please see the Information for the Poster Presenters for poster requirements.
- Archives: Extended abstracts; DVD and ACM Digital Library
Message from the Student Research Competition Chairs
The Student Research Competition (SRC) is a forum for undergraduate and graduate students to share their research results, exchange ideas, and improve their communication skills while competing for prizes at CHI 2011. Sponsored by Microsoft Research, the CHI SRC competition is a branch of the ACM Student Research Competition which hosts similar competitions at other ACM conferences. For work accepted to the CHI 2011 Student Research Competition, a travel grant of up to US $500 will be awarded to help cover travel expenses to the conference for the student. Students must be members of ACM to qualify for travel funding and awards.
The Student Research Competition has the following goals:- to give undergraduate and graduate students the opportunity to share their research ideas and results at CHI in a special forum that provides visibility for their work
- to give students the opportunity to meet with and interact with CHI attendees to share ideas, gain new insights, and understand possible practical applications
- to give students an opportunity to sharpen their communication skills, including visual, organizational, oral, and aural modalities
- to provide detailed feedback to students about their research and presentation, from a panel of distinguished judges from industry and academia
- to recognize and reward outstanding student research
The Student Research Competition is meant to be an opportunity for junior students to develop their skills as researchers and to give them an opportunity to showcase their work. As such, submissions must be authored by students alone - no co-authorship with supervisors is allowed. The competition entries must be authored by one student only (no co-authors). A travel grant will be provided to support student travel for each submission that is accepted. The top three winners at CHI 2011 in each category (undergraduate and graduate) will receive prizes of US $500, US $300, and US $200, respectively. All winners will receive an award plaque and two-year complimentary ACM membership with a subscription to ACM's Digital Library. Winners will be recognized during the closing plenary session of the CHI 2011 conference. These winners will also go on to compete in the ACM grand finals with winners from other ACM conferences.
Michael Terry, University of WaterlooAnne Aula, Google
Contact email: SRC@chi2011.org
What is a Student Research Competition Submission?
A submission to the Student Research Competition should describe recently completed or ongoing student research (possibly under the supervision of a faculty member), in any of the topic areas covered by CHI. Submissions should be original work that is neither in submission nor already published in CHI or another conference or journal.
Participants must be undergraduate or graduate students pursuing an academic degree at the time of initial submission. The contest has two categories, one for undergraduate research and the other for graduate research. Three winners will be selected in each category. Research completed while the student was an undergraduate may be submitted to the undergraduate category even if the student is now a first-year graduate student.
Submissions not accepted for the Student Research Competition may be asked to be part of the Works-in-Progress track.
Preparing and Submitting your Student Research Competition Paper
Students should submit a camera-ready non-anonymized Extended Abstract (6 pages maximum) written in the Extended Abstracts format along with an additional page containing a poster. Submissions not meeting the page limit or formatting requirements will be automatically disqualified. The student competing in the research competition must be the primary contributor of the work. Supervisors may not be co-authors of the submission.
Submissions should describe:- The research problem and motivation for the work
- Background and related work
- Approach and novelty of the research
- Results and contributions to the field of HCI
- Submit to the Student Research Competition category of CHI 2011 via the conference submission system
- The work should be submitted as a single PDF file no larger than 4 megabytes
- The submission must also include proof of student status by sending a note signed by your academic supervisor verifying all of the following information:
- your university
- your ACM member number
- whether you were a graduate or undergraduate when the work was done
- proof confirming that you are currently registered in an academic program full-time
- All materials must be received by the submission deadline
Student Research Competition Review Process
Submissions will be reviewed by a panel of experts, and evaluated based on:- Quality of work
- Novelty of approach
- Significance of the contribution to the field of HCI
- Clarity of written presentation
Confidentiality of submissions is maintained during the review process. All rejected submissions will be kept confidential in perpetuity. All submitted materials for accepted submissions will be kept confidential until the start of the conference, with the exception of title and author information which will be published on the website prior to the conference.
Up to twenty-five students in total will be chosen to participate in the competition at CHI 2011.
Upon Acceptance of Your Student Research Competition Abstract
A travel grant covering expenses for travel to CHI, including conference registration, transportation, lodging, and meals, up to a limit of US $500 will be provided to each student whose submission was accepted to the Student Research Competition. Students must be members of ACM to qualify for these awards.
At the Conference
The first round of the competition evaluates the research during a poster presentation at CHI. The presentation will be evaluated on two dimensions, given equal weight: (1) the presentation of the research, including visual aspects of the poster and the student's oral discussion, and (2) the research, specifically its quality, novelty, and significance of the contribution.
The poster must meet the size requirements for CHI posters. Please see the Information for the Poster Presenters.
Based on the results from the poster session, the judges will select students to advance to the second round. During the second round, students will have the opportunity to give a short presentation of their research followed by a question and answer period, which will be evaluated by a panel of judges. Winners will be announced during the closing plenary.
Competition Judges
TBA
After the Conference
The winners from each category will advance to ACM Grand Finals of the Student Research Competition where the winners of several ACM conferences compete for more prizes and recognition.
Accepted Student Research Competition Papers will be distributed in the CHI Conference Extended Abstracts, available at the conference on DVD and in the ACM Digital Library, where they will remain accessible to thousands of researchers and practitioners worldwide.